CBS Mornings Deals spotlights everyday products with exclusive discounts
CBS Mornings Deals paired 30% to 40% markdowns with a commission disclosure, putting the real value of each offer under scrutiny.

CBS Mornings Deals kept running across CBS Mornings and CBS Saturday Morning, with lifestyle experts Elizabeth Werner, Ashley Bellman and Gayle Bass fronting recent editions that framed the products as everyday lifestyle fixes, time-saving tools and, in some cases, holiday-season helpers.
CBS says CBS Mornings reaches a daily audience of 3 million viewers, which gives the recurring segment a sizable platform for merchandise pitched as useful rather than indulgent. That reach matters because CBS also discloses that it earns commissions on purchases made through its deals site, making the segment part consumer advice and part commerce engine.

The discounts promoted on the franchise have ranged from broad claims to specific price cuts. One CBS Mornings Deals segment described products available for at least 40% off the retail price. A Jan. 11, 2024 edition featured a Smart Design over-the-door pantry organizer priced at 30% off the retail price. Those numbers can look compelling on screen, but the useful question is whether the advertised retail price matches what the same item regularly sells for on ordinary online marketplaces.
CBS has continued updating the franchise into 2026, with recent video pages showing June and July airings on CBS Saturday Morning and CBS Mornings. The repeated refreshes suggest the segment is not a one-off promotion but a standing feature that cycles through new assortments while keeping the same sales formula: a familiar host, a lifestyle pitch and a limited-time markdown.
That structure makes price discipline the main test. A 30% discount can be meaningful on a durable home item, and a 40% markdown may be strong if the starting price is real and comparable. If the retail figure is inflated, the savings shrink fast. For viewers, the safest read is simple: compare the posted deal against the going price elsewhere before buying, especially when the recommendation sits inside a segment that CBS says generates commission revenue.
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